collaborative research on lobbyingfbaum/teaching/poli421_fa16/po… · web viewintroduction here....
TRANSCRIPT
TitleSubtitle
Your Name
POLI 421, Prof. BaumgartnerUNC-Chapel Hill, Fall 2016
Abstract
Public.
Keywords: framing, , content analysis
Draft, November xx, 2016
TitleIntroduction here. Explain the topic, your argument, speak in general (conceptual) terms, lay out
the gist of your argument. In particular, make your argument right in the first paragraph about
what you are going to demonstrate. Maybe it is: “The debate on immigration was transformed by
9/11. In the pre-9/11 world, the debate focused on x. Since 9/11, it has focused on y. By
documenting these trends with a content analysis of 15,000 stories in x, y, and z newspapers over
35 years, I show the impact of foreign policy even on domestic policy debates.” Whatever you
decide your thesis is, you will then organize the paper to explain the thesis, compare it to
previous studies of foreign policy effects, or immigration framing, and then present and explain
your data collection and results. Complete the first section by a paragraph such as the following.
(This is called a transition paragraph, or a road-map.)
The paper is organized as follows. The next section gives background on the issue based
on historical evidence and discusses previous studies of the topic… The following section
develops a set of quantitative indicators of how the media has discussed xxx. It explains in detail
the methodology chosen and discusses its likely accuracy. The following section presents the
results, and their analysis. In the concluding section, I explain the significance of the findings.
Background (level-A)Explain the relevant literature and others who have previously studied this topic. Put your study
in the context of others who have come before you.
At the end, transition to your own study, based on keywords. Here is what we wrote in
the “framing the poor article” you read in class. See how it transitions away from the literature
review and points to how we are doing it differently. Also, note that we are NOT MODEST; we
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take credit for what we are doing. If we don’t believe in what we are doing, why would the
reader?
Previous literature has looked quantitatively at selected periods of times, or at a single
program, or at changes in the racial composition of recipients. In this study, I examine the multi-
dimensional framing during an uninterrupted period of almost 50 years and present a model to
connect that framing with the public policy. We see a similar shift in framing, beginning in the
mid-to-late 1960s, as that identified by other authors, and show that shift continues to become
more negative even to the present day. We develop a similar argument here to that used by
Baumgartner and colleagues (2008) in their study of capital punishment, but we make key
adjustments to their methods. Most importantly, our coding of media coverage is based on a
sophisticated set of key-word counts, not manual coding from the printed Index as the previous
authors did. We explain our coding procedures below.
Data Collection and Measurement (Level-A)Explain here how you did your data collection. Here is how we explained it in the “framing the
poor” article. This is a good template, but obviously you will revise to explain how you did your
own.
New York Times Stories on Poverty (Level-B)
Our first task is to identify all stories from 1960 to 2008 on the topic of poverty in the United
States. First, we identified the common terms used to refer to situations of poverty, such as
“poverty,” “welfare,” “low-income,” and “impoverished,” and developed an initial string of
search terms. We developed these terms interactively over several weeks of searching,
experimenting, and paying attention to the validity of the terms in different historical periods.
We examined the New York Times Index for years in each decade, adjusting the string of terms in
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each decade to reflect the changing terms used to discuss poverty. Based on becoming familiar
with the terms used by perusing the annual indices over the entire time period of our study, we
then used the on-line version of the New York Times available through ProQuest, and limited our
search to the abstract or citation so as to find the articles that focus primarily on poverty. The
data covers the period between 1960 and 2007, the most recent year available through ProQuest.
The searches restrict the occurrence of “false hits,” those stories that do not focus on US poverty,
by excluding articles that include one of a number of different terms. Like our primary
keywords, the string of excluded terms varies for each decade. For example, the search for the
1980s excludes stories that mention the Cold War because they generally relate to poverty in the
Soviet Union. Determining the final sets of excluded terms required 200 different searches. Our
test, based on reading a systematic sample of the stories retrieved, revealed that 92.3 percent of
the stories were “true hits”—stories about US poverty issues. 1 Table 1 shows our string of
search terms. 2
(Insert Table 1 about here)
To determine whether the New York Times reflected a general focus that appeared in
many newspapers across the country, or followed its own idiosyncratic trends with respect to
welfare and poverty coverage, we compared it to four other newspapers: Baltimore Sun,
1 The search strings reported in Table 1 are the result of weeks of interactive adjustments to our procedures. For each year ending in 3, 6 or 9, we read 20 stories from the beginning of the year and 20 from the end. Of the 560 articles read through these procedures, 517 were true hits, reflecting a 92.3 percent accuracy of the searches. Of course, it is impossible to know how many stories we may have missed. We do believe these search terms have accurately assessed the level of attention to poverty across time, however. Even if we missed a certain percentage of all stories, trends over time would not be affected unless the percentage omitted differed across time, which we have no reason to expect.2 Note that the terms listed in Table 1 represent the end product of an extensive set of tests and experiments designed to isolate a set of terms that accurately reflect poverty issues. The 92 percent accuracy attests to the refinements we made in the terms based on our initial trial-and-error efforts.
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Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune. We chose those newspapers for their
political and geographic diversity, as well as the availability of their archives through ProQuest
(and therefore the ability to precisely replicate the methods used in The New York Times). The
Chicago Tribune is traditionally identified as a conservative newspaper. By including the
remaining newspapers, spread across the country, we demonstrate the existence of national
trends in focus on poverty. The search terms for the other newspapers are identical to those
outlined in Table 1, with a few additional exclusions to prevent counting articles multiple times.3
Figure 1 shows the number of stories over time.
(Insert Figure 1 about here)
Figure 1 shows the results of searching according to the terms laid out in Table 1 for five
different newspapers, as indicated. The New York Times, in the dark solid line, peaks with over
1,000 articles in the late-1960s and declines from there. Other newspapers are available only for
shorter time periods but they show remarkably similar trends, suggesting that media attention to
the War on Poverty was not the invention of a single newspaper but truly reflected a national
mood toward greater concern during the period of heightened governmental focus on this issue.4
Once we identified the total number of articles on poverty for a given year, we did additional
key-word searches to identify what frames of poverty were most prominent in the debate.
3 For example, the Los Angeles Times has many different versions, so that identical articles, which appear both in the San Fernando edition and the San Gabriel edition, often appear in a search as different articles. To eliminate this problem, the search in the Los Angeles Times excludes the articles in the San Fernando, San Gabriel, Orange County, San Diego, and valley editions. To mitigate this variability between newspapers, we read dozens of articles in each of the non-New York Times newspapers and excluded articles that contained a number of different terms.4 Correlations between the total coverage in the New York Times and the four other papers shown in Figure 1 are: .92, .90, .84, and .92. Other newspapers correlate with each other at similar levels; the lowest correlation among all the newspapers reported is .84.
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Five Frames
By reading some 560 articles in The New York Times that resulted from our search, we were able
to see the many different arguments about poverty and group them into broad themes. We
identify five distinct frames. Each of these encompasses considerable diversity, but we can
summarize them as follows:
Misery and Neglect: the poor constitute a separate society living in urban slums.
Social Disorder: the poor commit crimes or riot in the streets, causing policymakers to
focus on the dangers of failure to address the concerns of the poor.
Economic and Physical Barriers: the poor are without money because of temporary
economic conditions, disabilities, or old age.
Laziness and Dysfunction: the poor avoid work and are content to stay at home and have
children.
Cheating: the poor take advantage of the welfare system, to get rich and reap undeserved
benefits.
Each of those five frames encompasses many subframes. For example, the misery and
neglect frame includes articles about homelessness and slum living. The laziness and dysfunction
frame includes single mothers and welfare dependency. Through reading dozens of articles as
well as a review of the relevant literature, we identified the language that most often
accompanies each frame in newspaper articles. In an interactive manner similar to how we
refined our searches for poverty stories in general, we developed a string of search terms for each
of the five frames, and these are shown in Table 2.5
(Insert Table 2 about here)
5 To check the accuracy of the data, we read 20 New York Times articles in each decade for each frame. Out of the 500 articles, 467, or 93.7%, were positive hits. Because the positive hits represent such a majority of the framing searches, we use all of the articles.
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Table 2 shows the different search strings we used to identify the five ways of thinking
about poverty that are common in the US discourse. Figure 2 shows the trends for the New York
Times in how many times each frame occurred over time.6 (See Appendix B for a discussion of
how closely the framing found in the New York Times data corresponds to that in other
newspapers.)
(Insert Figure 2 about here)
Figure 2 shows the percent of stories identified by frame in a stacked-area format,
summing therefore to 100 percent for each year. The frames are ordered with the three more
generous ones at the bottom and the two stingy frames at the top. The data make very clear that
the early period of media discussion of poverty was marked by a distinctly positive tone of
discussion. The poor were discussed in terms of the notion of “misery and neglect;” there was
significant discussion of the threat of violence and social disorder associated with hopelessness
and despair; and the economic and physical barriers to rising out of poverty were important
elements of the debate. Together, these positive or generous frames toward the poor constituted
over 90 percent of the coverage in the first years of the series. Attention to “welfare queens” and
other “cheating” or “lazy” frames was rare at first but grew significantly in the 1970s. The
“cheating” frame grew especially quickly in the 1970s and declined in later years; it may never
have had the numerical dominance in the debate that it may have had in some elements of
popular culture and scholarship (at least not in the mainstream media sources surveyed here).
6 Note that the keyword searches conducted to construct Table 2 are not mutually exclusive. An article selected through the procedures explained in Table 1 might appear in none, one, or more than one of the categories in Table 2. However, despite the non-exclusive and non-exhaustive nature of the search process used, the results do show trends over time that correspond with qualitative research in the area and with our own understandings of shifts in the nature of the debate.
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The “lazy” frame grew throughout the period, from a tiny percentage of the total to the single
largest element of the debate by the early 21st century.
The way in which the public views a public issue determines the possible solutions,
according to Kingdon (1984). Kingdon starts with thinking about which items reach the political
agenda out of all the problems on which policymakers could focus. After identifying those
problems, policymakers have a number of alternatives for government action (Kingdon 1984, 4).
If lawmakers believe that welfare keeps recipients from working, than they would look for
alternatives that involve a stingier government, because reducing aid would solve the issue of
dependency. On the other hand, if the problem with poverty stems from economic barriers, the
alternatives would likely advocate a more generous government, creating jobs or investing in
education. In this study, the misery and neglect and economic and physical barriers frames would
likely lead to consideration of alternatives associated with more expansive government
programs, so we call those “generous frames.” The laziness and dysfunction and cheating frames
would result in the consideration of more restrictive alternatives, and we call those “stingy
frames.”
The social disorder frame is more complex, as many scholars have debated whether
rioting and protest lead to contraction or expansions in the welfare state. To Frances Fox Piven
and Richard A. Cloward (1971), the welfare state expands for the purpose of maintaining social
disorder, so it should be a generous frame. However, Durnam (1973) and Albritton (1979) found
disorder to be unrelated to the expansion of the rolls of Aid to Families with Dependent Children
(AFDC). In a state-level analysis of AFDC rolls, Fording (1997) found evidence that this
disorder can bring expanded relief, but that this relief is dependent on the strength of the group’s
electorate and of the group’s resistance. Here, we find that the disorder frame emerged in two
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waves: first, with the urban riots of the 1960s and secondly, with the Los Angeles riots of the
early 1990s. In the first case, the frame is associated with a large increase in government
generosity, while the second wave correlates with the continuing decrease that has occurred for
much of the last 30 years.7 In the end, we include our disorder frame as part of the generous
frame but we recognize that public understanding of it may well have shifted; clearly the
response to the LA riots was different from that of those of the 1960s, as Americans were much
less supportive of the uprising.
There is no doubt that media discussion of the poor has shifted. While there is no single
date on which we can pinpoint a shift in framing, we see a gradual movement from greater focus
on the structural causes of poverty, individual barriers to moving out of poverty, and the
collective dangers of having too many people living in conditions of despair. Slowly, elite
conversations shifted to focus on the poor exploiting the welfare system for un-deserved
financial gains and the dysfunctional nature of poverty assistance programs. This may be part of
a larger process in which individual rather than collective frames have become increasingly
prominent, and they may correspond to an increase in what Mark Smith has dubbed “The Right
Talk” in which conservative rhetoric has simply become more prominent over the decades (see
Smith 2007). Robert Cox has suggested that this shift, from social policy based on universality
and solidarity to social policy based on individuality, has taken place throughout the Western
world because of the collective impact of small changes to the welfare state (Cox 1998). Michael
7 Although the impact of disorder is clearly mixed, we code it as a generous frame because it correlates negatively with the stingy frames. However, the misery and neglect and laziness and dysfunction drive the changes in framing during the time period of this data. Statistically, our count of stories relating to disorder correlates weakly with either the generous frame or with spending. We code it as part of the generous frame partly because doing so underestimates, rather than overestimates, the strength of the changes we document. If we were to revise the coding of these stories in the later part of our series, as may be reasonable, this would only make the shift towards stingy frames even more remarkable.
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Katz cites three factors contributing to a new policy and rhetoric: the use of market models, a
dispersion from federal to the states of authority for making policy, and a coordinated effort
against perceived dependency (Katz 2001). Rather than focus here on where these shifting
frames came from, in the next sections we address the question of what effect they may have had
on public spending toward the poor.
Next Section, maybe more Data, or maybe not, dependingIn the “Framing the Poor” article we went on to measure some other things, so our data section
was quite long. You may or may not have more data after your discussion of how your issue has
been framed over time.
Discussion / AnalysisNo matter how long your section is where you are explaining your data collection and what you
found, now comes the time to discuss its implications. Speaking in conceptual terms rather than
just in terms of your keywords, how do you interpret the results? What do they show? How does
this relate to the question you posed, or the thesis you presented, in the first paragraph of your
paper?
Here is how we wrote it up in the “Faming the Poor” article.
How the Poor Got FramedIn 2008, the poverty gap stood at $140 billion dollars and was growing dramatically; in 1960,
before the establishment of most poverty assistance programs, the gap (measured in constant
2005 dollars) was about $60 billion and was reduced from there. There is little chance that
future policymakers will move to address the poverty issue in the next decade. Conservative
attacks on government spending, concerns about the size of the deficit, and “fiscal
responsibility” will keep spending from growing even though we can expect poverty to increase
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dramatically. With unemployment hovering at over 9 percent and little prospect for a quick
economic recovery, many will remain in poverty and that poverty may become deeper and
deeper. Further, as Mead (2011) has shown, the new elite discourse on the poor is not simply
conservative or ideologically right-wing. Rather, he argues that it has shifted from an abstract
ideological stance to one more focused on more operational issues of “what works” and on a
long-standing unease at the idea of recipients not working for the benefits they receive. Our data
suggest that this focus on the individual, as opposed to the system, may be one of the most
important elements of the general ideological ascendance of neo-liberalism in American politics
since the 1970s. The “stingy” frames we have documented are part of a larger trend toward
skepticism of governmental activism, especially that directed toward the disadvantaged.
All public policies incorporate many possible ways of thinking about them, and public
attention can shift from one aspect of the issue to another over time. Policymakers, members of
the public, and journalists once focused on aspects of poverty that are beyond the control of
those who find themselves with dire economic prospects or which focus on the collective costs to
all Americans from having large numbers of poor. This resulted in a large decrease in the
amount of poverty in this country. From this initial focus, associated with optimistic efforts to
alleviate poverty and which justified massive interventions and spending, the public has given
up, tired, frustrated, and discouraged. Collectively, attention now focuses on what we have
called the “stingy” frames: the poor are individually responsible for their problems, and
government efforts to help them may do more harm than good. We have shifted from an
overwhelming focus on one side of the coin to an equally disproportionate focus on the other
side. And policy has followed the framing.
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Our focus has been on a narrow definition of media framing that obviously cannot
capture all aspects of public discussion. This is because we wanted to develop a single indicator
of the state of public or media discussion of poverty and associate that with an indicator of the
policy response to it. The two indicators do indeed correspond, indicating that measures of
media framing can be very helpful in explaining government spending priorities, even in a
statistical sense. The ten-year lag is a surprise, as the existing literature does not suggest that
policy should take so long to follow framing changes. However, it suggests that there may be a
different dynamic when dealing with issues of spending than with a policy like the death penalty.
At a time like today, when there is a focus on balanced budgets and reducing the deficit, it is
easy to imagine large cuts in means-tested spending with little attention to the poor. Government
generosity might decrease when the media simply pays less attention, with what little there is
focused on a negative social construction. Perhaps the surprise in our story is not the gradual
decline in generosity, but the initial surge. Building political support for the large-scale efforts to
fight poverty in the 1960s was associated with extraordinary social discussions about the need to
do so; our data make this clear and also how unusual that period was. The early post-war years
saw a number of bold programs designed to harness the great power of the US government, often
in conjunction with the private sector, to solve a number of ills. Nuclear power was going to
create electricity “too cheap to meter;” pesticides would usher in a new era a agricultural bounty
and put an end to hunger world-wide (see Baumgartner and Jones 1993); the civil rights
movement seemed destined to transform society; and so on. Perhaps it is best to view our
collective enthusiasm about the War on Poverty in light of these other efforts. In the case of
poverty, as in these others, the initial enthusiasm associated with the earlier period has given way
to great pessimism. In contrast to the dangers of nuclear power or the excesses of the “green
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revolution,” in the case of poverty we may currently be overlooking the degree of success that
the initial programs had. Poverty was decreased by a substantial degree. But enthusiasm for
government action faded away nonetheless.
We make no claims that our simple indicators capture the entire story. But we do think
they capture some essentials, allowing us to look over two generations of poverty policy, and
contributing to an explanation of a set of conundrums, such as why the War on Poverty took
place, and why it has been abandoned. While our measures of framing do not capture all aspects
of the public debate, we think that readers familiar with congressional debates surrounding
President Clinton’s welfare reform, those wondering why President Obama has not introduced
proposals to fight poverty, those who can remember President Reagan’s claims about “young
bucks” using their welfare checks to buy T-bone steaks, or those who know about President
Johnson’s urgent appeals to create a “war on poverty” should be able to see a correspondence
between our simple measures and a broader reality. Public focus has changed. And policy has
followed.
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Tables and Figures Table 1. Search Terms Used to Identify Poverty-Related Stories, 1960–2007.Decade Search Terms2000s ENHAI(welfare OR poverty OR "low-income" OR "public housing" OR needy OR
ghetto OR indigent OR impoverished) AND PDN(>1/1/2000) AND PDN(<12/31/2007) AND NOT ("endangering the welfare" OR Haiti OR Nazi OR Brazil OR China OR Africa OR India OR Iraq OR Europe OR Afghanistan OR animal) AND NOT AT(review)
1990s ENHAI(welfare OR poverty OR low-income OR "public housing" OR ghetto OR needy OR indigent OR impoverished) AND PDN(>1/1/1990) AND PDN(<12/31/1999) AND NOT (Haiti OR "endangering the welfare" OR "Cold War" OR Iraq OR "United Nations" OR Brazil OR China OR Africa OR India OR Europe OR animal OR Soviet OR Russia OR Holocaust) AND NOT AT(review)
1980s ENHAI(ghetto OR welfare OR poverty OR low-income OR "public housing" OR needy OR indigent OR impoverished) AND PDN(>1/1/1980) AND PDN(<12/31/1989) AND NOT (Rome OR Nazi OR Germany OR Panama OR "Central America" OR "Latin America" OR Haiti OR "Cold War" OR United Nations OR Brazil OR China OR Europe OR animal OR Soviet OR Russia OR India OR Africa) AND NOT AT(review)
1970s ENHAI(ghetto OR (welfare AND NOT "Health, Education and Welfare") OR poverty OR low-income OR "public housing" OR slum OR needy OR indigent OR impoverished) AND PDN(>1/1/1970) AND PDN(<12/31/1979) AND NOT (Ireland OR Nazi OR Cuba OR Iran OR Germany OR Rome OR Brazil OR "Cold War" OR United Nations OR China OR India OR Europe OR animal OR Soviet OR Africa) AND NOT AT(review)
For 9/5/1973 – 5/31/1978:ENHAI(ghetto OR (welfare AND NOT "Health, Education and Welfare") OR poverty OR low-income OR "public housing" OR slum OR needy OR indigent OR impoverished) AND PDN(>9/5/1973) AND PDN(<5/31/1978) AND NOT (Ireland OR Nazi OR Cuba OR Iran OR Germany OR Rome OR Brazil OR "Cold War" OR United Nations OR China OR India OR Europe OR animal OR Soviet OR Africa) AND NOT AT(front_page OR review)
1960s ENHAI(ghetto OR (welfare AND NOT "Health, Education and Welfare") OR poverty OR low-income OR "public housing" OR slum OR needy OR indigent OR impoverished) AND PDN(>1/1/1960) AND PDN(<12/31/1969) AND NOT (Israeli OR Japan OR Russia OR Nazi OR Europe OR Germany OR Brazil OR Rome OR "United Nations" OR China OR India OR Cuba OR Soviet OR animal OR Africa) AND NOT AT(Review)
Note: The study uses two different strings of search terms for the 1970s because an error in ProQuest caused indexed in the database as “front_page” to be counted twice. ENHAI limits the search to the abstract, and citation, not the full text.
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Table 2. Identifying Five Frames of Poverty through Electronic Search Terms Frame Search TermsMisery and Neglect
poverty-stricken OR "urban renewal" OR despair OR shelter OR bleak OR blight OR hunger OR ghetto OR "neediest cases" OR homeless OR slum
Social Disorder
anger OR police OR killing OR violence OR "civil right" OR crime OR gang OR riot OR demonstrator OR (strike W/3 rent OR welfare OR worker OR union) OR protest OR ("community action" AND NOT "community action agency")
Economic and Physical Barriers
(student W/1 aid OR needy OR loan OR disadvantaged) OR industrial OR wage OR economy OR "affordable housing" OR "unemployment rate" OR disabled OR "poor children" OR elderly OR aged
Laziness and Dysfunction
able-bodied OR dependency OR "work requirement" OR mother OR "welfare family" OR father OR "welfare hotel" OR (drug AND NOT Medicaid OR Medicare OR company OR prescription) OR abortion OR "child welfare" OR workfare OR "welfare to work"
Cheating chiseler OR cheat OR fraud OR ineligible OR overpayment OR corruption OR audit
Note: These searches were run on the results obtained after searching for poverty-related stories through the search terms reported in Table 1.
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Figure 1. Attention to Poverty in Five US Newspapers.
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Figure 2. Five Frames of Media Attention to Poverty.
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References Albritton, Robert B. 1979. “Social Amelioration through Mass Insurgency? A reexamination of
the Piven and Cloward Thesis.” American Political Science Review. 4(December): 1003–
1011.
Avery, James M., and Mark Peffley. 2003. “Race Matters: The Impact of News Coverage of
Welfare Reform on Public Opinion.” In Race and the Politics of Welfare Reform, ed.
Sanford Schram, Joe Soss, and Richard C. Fording. Ann Arbor, MI: University of
Michigan Press, 131–150.
Baumgartner, Frank R., Suzanna L. De Boef and Amber E. Boydstun. 2008. The Decline of the
Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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Appendix A. Measuring Government Aid to the PoorThese are just excerpts from the appendices in our paper. The idea is that if you do anything
complicated, and it reads like along detour away from the main point, just put it in an appendix,
and then explain it there. When you explain it, the idea is that if someone were to come along
five years later and want to replicated exactly what you did, they could read your appendix and
understand how to do it. A lot of what we put in here is called “robustness checking” (aka
“bomb-proofing”) – just anticipating flaws that someone might raise, and explaining how you
already thought of that, and it’s not a problem.
Appendix B. Media Framing of Poverty in Five NewspapersIn Figure 1 we showed the correspondence of New York Times coverage of poverty issues as
compared to four other newspapers. Figure 2 showed the shifting frames of New York Times
coverage. Table B.1 shows the terms excluded in the searches of other newspapers, to avoid
duplications.
(Insert Table B.1 here)
Figure B.1 shows the percent “generous” frames across these same papers. Note that all papers
were not available for the entire time period of interest, which is why we use the New York Times
in our analysis. But these data suggest that we would reach very similar results with a broader
range of newspapers.
(Insert Figure B.1 here)
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Appendix C. Pre- and Post-Transfer Estimates of the Poverty Gap.A possible concern in the analysis presented in the paper is that our measure of the poverty gap is
based on estimates of poverty after the payment of income taxes and the receipt of transfer
payments. We therefore test here the robustness of our findings when using a pre-transfer
estimate of the poverty gap. We thank Prof. James Ziliak of the University of Kentucky for
providing data from 1979 to 2009.
First: Extend the series.
As we did in Figure 3, we start by extending the series to cover our entire time span. We use the
same regression as reported above, but we omit government spending on poverty, as that should
affect post-transfer numbers, but not those before government transfers have taken place; indeed
this is the entire reason for the robustness test we do here. The simple model including the
number of poor and the poverty rate explains 85 percent of the variance in Ziliak’s measure of
the pre-transfer poverty gap. Table C.1 shows these results and Figure C.1 shows the resulting
series.
(Insert Table C.1 and Figure C.1 about here)
Second: Compare Pre- and Post-Transfer Gap
The two measures of the poverty gap are substantially different, as one might imagine. Indeed,
the difference between them can be seen as a measure of the effectiveness of the tax and
spending system. If spending were sufficient to eliminate the poverty gap, then the pre-transfer
number could be substantial but the post-transfer number would be zero. Figure C.2 shows the
comparison of the two series.
(Insert Figure C.2 about here)
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Measured in Billions of 2005 dollars, the pre-transfer poverty gap is consistently about
2.2 times as large as the post-transfer measure. The dashed line reflects our estimate of the Gap
before transfers and it ranges from approximately 100 billion to over 300 billion dollars over the
length of our study, as shown on the left scale of the graph. The solid line, measured on the right
scale, shows the post-transfer numbers, which range from 60 to 140 billion. The correspondence
in growth of the two series over time is obvious.
Third: Re-estimate the Link between Framing and the Government Generosity Index Using the Revised Figures.
Considering what may be a surprisingly close correspondence between pre- and post-transfer
indicators of the poverty gap, it will now be no surprise that our estimate of the Government
Generosity Index is virtually unchanged when we calculate it using the pre- rather than post-
transfer estimates of the poverty gap (the correlation between the two is 0.9948). In Table C.2
and Figure C.3 we re-estimate the regression from Figure 7 and show virtually identical results.
(Insert Table C.2 and Figure C.3 about here)
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